Davis Rink

The Davis Rink was an indoor ice rink on the campus of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. The arena served as the home for the Dartmouth ice hockey program for nearly 50 years and was the last natural ice surface used for Division I hockey when it closed in 1975.[1]

Davis Rink
LocationHanover, New Hampshire 03755
OwnerDartmouth College
OperatorDartmouth College
Construction
Opened1929
(91 years ago)
Closed1975
(45 years ago)
Demolished1985
Tenants
Dartmouth ice hockey 1929–1975

History

After having to field their team on Occom Pond throughout the 1920s, Dartmouth wanted a more permanent home for one of the premier college programs. The college erected Davis Rink in 1929 and, while it was one of the first indoor rinks for a college team, the ice was still natural and subject to weather conditions. While other rinks across the country would retrofit their facilities with artificial ice, Davis Rink would remain an open-air arena for its duration. Towards the end it was apparent that the arena was a drag on the program, with inconsistent ice and very sparse seating, and in 1975 the Thompson Arena was completed and served as the next home for the Big Green.

The Davis Rink would remain on campus until it was demolished in 1985 to make way for the Berry Sports Center.[2]

gollark: So it autostarts on boot and such?
gollark: On x86 platforms there doesn't seem to be much variance in distro hardware support.
gollark: My server *also* runs Arch, but my "secondary server" aka raspberry pi runs Void.
gollark: Also no externally enforced requirements to run Windows software.
gollark: I have vast amounts of free time, some competence at Linux use, and really don't like spending money on things, so I mostly use slightly exotic linuxen.

References

  1. "Dartmouth College Athletic Facilities". Dartmouth Big Green. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  2. "Rink Review: Dartmouth's Thompson Arena". ECAC Hockey Blog. February 16, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.